Chief Change Officer - Tricia and Edward: Getting Teams to Work Together Without the Headaches – Part One
Episode Date: January 18, 2025Part One. Social media has conditioned us to treat connections as fleeting, but real collaboration demands something deeper. How can we build strong teams and achieve lasting success without meaningfu...l relationships? In this episode, I sit down with Tricia Cerrone and Edward J. van Luinen, who transformed their Disney work relationship into a 10-year friendship and a thriving partnership. They’re now co-authoring a book to help others unlock the power of sustainable collaboration. Stay tuned for part two, where we’ll explore their unique framework: five key behaviors and a focus on “noble purpose” that redefines teamwork. Key Highlights of Our Interview: Emotional Banking: The Secret to Long-Lasting Work Relationships “Relationships at work thrive on trust, respect, and mutual goals. By making consistent positive deposits into the ‘emotional bank,’ teams can evolve into high-performing units. Delivering results is key, but so is showing up for each other and building something lasting, as Trish and I found over a three-year project.” Collaboration Isn’t Just Tools—It’s Human Connection “The business world is spending almost $40 billion on collaboration tools, which are a band-aid for our failures to communicate. If you don’t have the human behaviours of generosity, resourcefulness, co-creation, action, and gratitude, no technology is going to help your team be happy or collaborate better.” Be the Change You Seek—Gandhi’s Wisdom for Collaboration “There’s a great quote by Gandhi: ‘Create the change you want to be.’ That’s the foundation of our collaboration model—being the change and the leader your team is asking you to be.” Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guests: Tricia Cerrone and Edward J. Van Luinen ______________________ Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 2.5% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI 3.5 Million+ Downloads 80+ Countries
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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and
human transformation from around the world.
Don't burn bridges.
Keep up with business connections and personal relationships. Because you never know when that connection or person
could become your collaborator, business partner,
or referral to a great opportunity.
That's how I landed five job offers within three months
I landed five job offers within three months after leaving a role that led to mental depression years ago. Today, though, it's so easy to burn and build bridges. You can add a friend in one second and just as easily delete them.
This use of friendly in quotation UI UX experience has seeped into our modern mindset, making it effortless to kick people out of our own
circles or lives.
But without sustainable connections, how can we collaborate, build stronger teams can create outcomes that benefit everyone?
In today's episode, I sit down with two guests, Edward Van Duden and Trisha Strong, to talk
about connection and collaboration.
This is part one of our two-part series.
Today, Edward and Trisha will look back on their old collaborative journey, which started
ten years ago at Disney. They turned a
positive work relationship into a sustainable personal friendship that has
now grown into a business partnership and a co-authoring collaboration on a book about collaboration.
In tomorrow's episode, part 2 will dive into the vision and framework for collaboration, centered on a noble purpose,
and five key behaviors.
What are these behaviors?
How can we practice them?
And why is collaboration so challenging today?
I assure you, the method isn't just another software solution.
It's far more human-centered than what we're used to seeing.
Let's start collaborating.
Good morning Edward and Thresher, welcome to my show.
Thank you.
Great to be here.
Yeah, so happy to be here.
We always start with a self-introduction. But today's episode is extra special,
because for the first time ever, I have not one but two
guests joining me.
A unique moment for the show.
Let's kick things off, Edward and Tricia, whichever one of you
would like to go first. Share a bit about yourselves and your personal journey.
Then we'll go into how the two of you came together to collaborate. After all, collaboration is the key theme of today's episode.
So let's hear your individual stories and then we'll get into how your paths
crossed and what makes this collaboration so impactful.
Thank you very much, Vince. I'm delighted. We're delighted to be here and grateful for
this opportunity to chat with your worldwide audience. I'm Edward Van Lunen and I always
start my origin story this way. I was a United States Peace Corps volunteer in the 1980s
and I was sent to the Republic of Guinea in West Africa
to be an English as a foreign language teacher
at two high schools in a mid-sized town,
about 600 miles in the interior of the country.
And on the first day of my teaching,
I had two overriding emotions.
One was fear.
Edward, these students are listening to you.
Are you making any sense? If not, you better start making sense really fast.
And then after about three months or so,
I had that other emotion happen, which is, I think I like this.
I'm enjoying this work. Fast forward 35 years to where we are today,
and I am still making teams, companies, and leaders better.
In between, I was privileged to work
for some great companies and having been mentored
by incredible human resources leaders, mostly female,
at Avon Products, at Heineken, at Sony, and at
Disney.
And I am really a talent development leader and grateful to be in this space and business
and here speaking with you and Trisha today.
So thank you for having me.
I'll jump in now.
I'm Trisha Sarone and my history really goes back. My entire career
has been one of designing and telling stories with new technologies. I think pretty much
every project I've ever done had some kind of either new hardware or software or experience
that we were trying to create. And in doing that, working a lot in the interactive world,
it led me to Disney where I spent most of my career.
I had an amazing career at Disney
and I really got to do everything I wanted to do.
But my sweet spot was always in innovation
and coming up with new ideas.
I was able to lead our Blue Sky studio for four years
and just come up with ideas with the teams there
for retail and brides and restaurants and all
sorts of things I really loved it.
I also was really good at teaching other people how to
develop ideas and design and innovate.
That's what led me in my career to start doing a lot of the
talent development,
which my leader then hooked me up with Edward down the road.
And that's really how we ended up meeting.
So you both met in Disney, right?
I love to hear more about that first experience, webking together.
Let's dive webking together.
Let's dive into the details.
Edward, let's start with you.
How did you feel when you first met Trishir?
And how did this collaboration unfold from your perspective.
And then Trishir, we would love to hear your side of the story as well.
I think it will be really interesting to explore both viewpoints.
At Disney, working at Imagineering, I would say a talent leader who gets business.
And I met Trish initially when I was new at the company
and saw her in a meeting and I thought,
this is a business leader who gets talent.
So as in a talent development role,
you're always looking for business leaders who get talent
as much as their technical or functional skills.
And that certainly was Trish.
So I was delighted to meet her.
So from a professional support
and business relationship perspective now,
I had a goal to lead talent development at Imagineering,
which was to make sure that leaders and teams globally
were working and successfully
at building their next level up leadership.
I could in no way do that by myself.
So I was always looking for business partners
and Trisha was that business partner.
And I was just delighted to that early meeting.
We had a couple of meetings and I thought this is something
that is a beginning of a collaboration
that I think could be very promising.
My side of the story, I get invited to a meeting
in my leader's office and Edward is sitting on the sofa
and I'm asked to sit next to him.
And then our leader says, we have this initiative,
I want you to collaborate.
And he's grinning like it was the best idea
he ever came up with.
And in my mind, I'm sitting there going,
what just happened?
There's so many problems with this.
People don't collaborate in leadership.
Not the way you think.
I could see all the barriers to us being successful
and succeeding in this project.
I thought the project was really important,
but I also knew this had
been assigned to Edward, and if I jump in, it'll look like I'm taking over the project and all
this other stuff. Our leader was just like, he was just happy to have us there. You guys will figure
it out. And so we left. I was thinking, okay, so she wants us to co-lead and all the problems with that.
We are a matrix organization, so he reports up to a different leader and I report to a
different leader.
And you definitely don't want one leader to have more information than the other earlier
than the other.
So there was going to be politics involved.
There would be how do we manage the same team and they don't go to one person or the other and say,
he said I could do this or she said I could do this.
There's all those issues.
And then there's just like communication and agreeing on a direction that you want to go.
And at the end of the day, if something goes wrong, who is accountable?
So I had all these things going through my head when Edward invited me to
a coffee for us to talk through what the project needed first and how we were going to do it.
I wasn't all gung-ho like this is going to be awesome, but I was at least 13 for okay what do
I know about this new guy? And I had met with Edward a couple times. I had been
in his office and he was like one of the most helpful HR people that I had ever experienced.
So in 30 minutes, he gave me a plan that was going to help me with an initiative I was working on.
And there was innovation books on his desk. So I'm like, okay, he can't be that bad. We have some common interests there.
There's a lot of savants and passionate people.
Be imaginary.
So corralling a group of us is not an easy thing.
And I was in a session where he went
leading some development and I was like,
oh my gosh, they're going to just run him over.
But he managed to get everyone on track.
So I had those two positive experiences.
But I still felt like we're really different people
in terms of our personality and our background
and so many other things.
But we had that first coffee.
And Edward did a couple things really well
in that first coffee that helped me to relax
and realize, okay, so far so good.
He understands where I'm coming from,
and he's offering to understand, like what how I need to communicate,
what my time availability is. And just that little bit of generosity toward understanding me
opened up space for me and my mind and heart to then reciprocate and to say, okay, what do you
need from me? And then we'd made a plan to meet next.
And that's how we got started from my perspective.
Absolutely.
And such great memories and thoughts and feelings
of how we got started.
Absolutely, really fun.
That was how long ago?
I don't know, is it 2013 or 14?
Yeah, I would say it was 20... 20... let's see, 14.
Yes.
Wow, 10 years ago.
That's a long time.
So after that first encounter at Disney,
how the working relationship evolved?
Was it more day-to-day interaction? Or maybe project-based, on and off? Did you
face any moments of confrontation, or was it mostly collaborative? I'd like to hear how both of you describe the experience after that initial meeting.
So it was a three-year project, which is rare in a way for people to lead equally.
And so it gave us a lot of time to learn all the things that we probably
didn't know about collaboration.
But I think we had good intuition and previous
we've led both led a lot of projects and things at other companies before so we
had some skills going into it. We had pretty close contact regularly we had a
weekly meeting we had our teams had task force meetings we would text each other
when we had updates and then talk on the phone if we were available.
It was always so positive that I think that contributed
to us building a friendship.
And also we realized that everything that we were,
the way that we were treating each other,
we were also treating our team and modeling that for them.
So they were emulating us and they were also passing it on to new people
who we brought on to the team.
So it had this ongoing onboarding aspect
when you would join our team.
We noticed that our team,
they weren't just amazing.
It's not like we got to pick everyone that we wanted.
And sometimes we only had people for a short amount of time.
But everyone who was on the team always just gave us their A-game. They were always solving problems. They were always had just positive energy. We're going to work together to help
each other and make everything successful. And we're not when we left the company we were
ever night when we left the company we were talking about,
just there was something very different about that project and about that experience.
And it's not that neither of us have had,
you know, passion, energy on teams.
It was just that every positive thing was on that project
and in that group and in those people.
And so that's when we start deconstructing the experience.
Absolutely agree with you Trish.
And I feel that what was fundamental,
but still unformed until after we left Disney
were the five collaboration behaviors.
And we demonstrated them, right?
And then others also did.
And that was how we first role-modeled it
and grew the team. So coupled with the five behaviors which were essentially
pretty innovative and pretty human behaviors and very original because
we've hired a researcher to validate that they are unique. They were coupled with
the noble purpose and that's not just the vision and mission of the company
that people memorize or try to memorize or try to live. The noble purpose of the project is that
it's commonly understood but also internalized. I am here to do this, to meet this goal, but I'm
here first to work closely and support the career growth of my team members.
And in that first meeting, it was not to receive a list of tasks and
come back and say how many you did.
That first meeting was who are you?
What's your skill that you offer everyone here and how can you support this team?
And at the end of the meeting,
a little bit about the noble purpose so that we're all
focused.
I think when we asked people, what do you want to learn on this team, they were quite
surprised.
No one had ever asked them that before on a project team meeting.
So there were some really essential elements that I think that we did to build this collaboration
approach.
And then fast forward over the last 10 years, we carried,
as Trish said, what we did and defined the five behaviors,
coupled it with noble purpose, but also launched a business,
Authentic Collaboration Incorporated, virtually.
We've also started a book and did that virtually.
So not only does collaboration work in person, it also works virtually,
because we did it the last 10 years, launching a business, writing a book. So it's applicable to
everyone wherever you are. And there's a great quote by Gandhi, which many people know,
which is, create the change you want to be. So I feel that that's really at the heart here is be the change you seek,
be the collaboration leader that you want to be, and the organization the team is asking you to be.
So if I understand correctly, after your time at Disney, both of you went your separate ways, pursuing your own paths,
but you stayed in close touch as friends.
Then at some point, you reunited and started working together again, forming a company, and even co-authoring a new book.
Is that a fair way to summarize your 10-year journey together?
I think so.
So we had worked together for those three years and then we both left not too far, maybe in the same year, I'm not sure.
But we actually would talk and stay in touch, that just kind of friendship. We would always
be talking about this project and we finally broke it down. And I would say we broke it down to the
behaviors first and then we were like, we need to write this because
this needs to be captured.
Because it's not just about the behaviors, but it's also about how you express them and
that you understand why they work.
Because a lot of the times people do the right thing, but then they don't realize why it
worked and so they don't repeat it.
And so we felt really strong about,
we need to write this down.
And so we ended up doing the book first
and then we started looking at how to teach it to people.
So it was in that order.
Exactly.
And both of you were sharing your memories.
It made me reflect on my own experiences working in corporations.
I've had some great memories and some not-so-great ones.
I remember working with amazing colleagues, some more senior, some junior, or maybe at the same
level, often in different offices and locations.
These were people I had such a strong connection with, even hanging out after work. But as time passed, I moved on to other things,
became an entrepreneur.
And while I kept in touch with some of them,
others drifted away.
Our conversations became fewer, and the connection faded over time.
Sometimes naturally, sometimes with a sense of loss.
I guess what I'm trying to say here is, since we're talking about collaboration today,
which I see as a form of relationship.
I'm curious about your journey together.
You started as work friends, obviously had a positive working relationship, and then
stayed in touch after your time at Disney.
But how did you sustain that work friendship
and evolve it into a personal relationship
and then eventually into a business partnership?
I think this would be really meaningful to hear,
especially in today's world, with the
rise of social media, building and maintaining real connections isn't easy.
So I'd love to hear your insights on how you kept that relationship strong and turned it into something much deeper,
both personally and professionally.
You have asked a really excellent question.
One is that relationship is vital in certainly a work situation,
but also it comes with respect and awareness
of the strengths that what each person brings
to that professional relationship.
And as Trish said earlier, we have some similarities
because we care first about the company and the team
and our own success.
So we've got our priorities in order,
but also we demonstrated those five behaviors consistently.
So that built up trust.
That built up a track record of what we call positive deposits in
the emotional bank of goodwill,
of trust, of also delivering.
It's not all about feeling,
because we do have to deliver and we did accomplish our three-year project wonderfully. So, Vince, I really
like what you said about relationship as the focus. The second thing I believe I
heard you say is that this is a process. There's an evolution to building
professional relationships, which of course becomes friends and in the
personal domain as well. Like collaboration, it takes a while to establish collaboration with yourself
as a leader. With a co-leader like Trish and I did, it took three years and that's
why we have this method and process because we built it. But also it had to
be expanded to our team, to champions, to peers in the company,
and then expanded even in our lives if we so choose,
in how we approach people, in how we assess talent,
how we hire people, what are the qualities
of collaboration that are really important.
So it's truly evolutionary and it's relationship focused,
and it takes awareness,
but also discipline for what could live these behaviors more and more in the areas of our
lives that are really important. Because we're all trying to change and companies are trying
to change and leaders and teams are trying to change and we found our we believe is a
really strong formula to do that.
There's something that kept us together to your point Vince and that was we recognize a noble purpose bigger than ourselves and that's what's been driving us to keep working together and keep
pursuing things and is in some ways the foundation of our friendship and I suppose every great
relationship has a noble purpose.
Even if you're building a family,
you have a vision for your family.
But for us, this noble purpose is that we recognize
that a lot of people are not happy in the workplace
and they struggle on their teams,
and it could be easier and it could be better,
and they could really love their jobs.
And that was like a metric that Edward had come up with. We need to love the I love my job
metric and so we recognized that this was a problem and we also saw that the
behaviors of collaboration are not just great leadership behaviors but they're
these human behaviors that everyone can learn and when they're in action, they make work better and happier.
So for that noble purpose that we both shared,
we want everyone in the workplace and the world to like,
yeah, you can enjoy your work, you can be a better human,
and you can help others be a better human.
And I think that's the emotion driving our work in a way.
For each of us, we express it differently,
but that's a little bit of a foundation.
And I think for young people listening
and for building relationships,
Edward said earlier that we collaborated online.
The industry that work, the business world
is spending almost like $40 billion
on collaboration tools and technologies,
which are in a way a bandaid for our failures as a human
to collaborate and to talk and to communicate.
But even these now they're saying
are almost dehumanizing us.
And obviously there's nothing wrong with technology.
It's just we have lost a little bit of our humanity.
And so these five behaviors of generosity and resourcefulness, co-creation, action, and gratitude
are five easy ones to remember and practice that anyone can get better at and that will
help all of your relationships at work and in life. That's another reason why
we're passionate about it because if you have those then the technology will work
for you but if you don't have those or something similar then all the
technology in the world isn't gonna to help your team be happy or
collaborate better or communicate better. I could go on about like how Edward and I lived those
five behaviors, but even just generosity in the beginning, when you are meeting someone to offer
them a smile, to offer them a handshake, to ask something
about themself first instead of making it about yourself first.
That's like the most basic human thing that we can do.
And sometimes we lose that.
And so all these behaviors that we have in collaboration
do help you to grow in all your relationships. I couldn't agree more, Trish.
Metrics are important.
The noble purpose is what drives the team
and you and I in collaboration.
And over three years,
our team on the project went from two to 70 people.
Now, they cycled in at different times
and different numbers of team members.
But I feel you and I with collaboration created a team that people wanted to be on.
And that's truly the challenge of leaders today, is not saying you must go into the office five days
a week. It is wanting and creating the environment that team members want to be on.
So I absolutely agree.
Before we dive into the five principles in your book and the noble purpose behind it,
I want to ask, why does this book matter?
On the flip side, what is the problem you're trying to solve with the book?
From what you've shared with me so far, you believe collaboration is the solution to many
of the biggest workplace challenges.
So if collaboration is the key, that means there are a lot of issues
in the workplace today.
What are those problems?
As you see them.
We have seen that people say, oh, go collaborate, but they don't understand what that means.
And so what we have discovered in our work, or what we believe from the work that we've
done, is that people just simply don't understand what collaboration is, and they're spending
billions of dollars on a problem they don't understand.
And two issues with that is that people think that the core unit of collaboration
is teams or tools or technologies, but we're saying no. The core unit of collaboration is the individual. And so we all have to work on our individual skills first or
we won't be able to collaborate with anyone. There's this other piece of
collaboration is not one action, it's a collection of actions or behaviors. That's
why we say these five behaviors. In the last 30 minutes, Edward and Frasier went down the memory lane and reflected on
their all-collaborative journey.
It began 10 years ago at Disney.
They turned a positive work relationship into a sustainable personal friendship that has
now grown into a business partnership and co-authoring collaboration on a book about
collaboration. In tomorrow's episode, part 2 will dive into the vision and framework for collaboration,
centered on a noble purpose and five key behaviors.
What are these behaviors?
How can we practice them?
And why is collaboration so challenging today?
I assure you, the methodology isn't just an other software solution.
It's far more human-centric than what we're used to seeing.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated
reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.